US equity markets retreated on Friday (3 June) after a stronger than expected employment report buttressed expectations of further interest rate hikes - Dow down -349-points or -1.05%, The broader S&P500 fell -1.63%, with Consumer Discretionary (down -2.85%), Information Technology (-2.48%) and Communication Services (-2.37%) all dropping over >2% lead ten of the eleven primary sectors lower on Friday (3 May). Energy (up +1.40%) was the only primary sector to advance. Tesla Inc fell -9.22% after Reuters reported, citing an internal email, that Chief Executive Officer (CEO) Elon Musk wants to cut 10% of jobs at the electric vehicle maker. According to Reuters’ report, Mr Musk also said in the email that he has a “super bad” feeling about the economy. Mr Musk’s comments followed similarly cautious comments from JPMorgan Chief Executive Officer (CEO) CEO Jamie Dimon earlier last week warning of an economic “hurricane” caused by the Federal Reserve and the war in Ukraine is brewing. American Airlines Group Inc fell -7.10% after the air carrier raised its revenue growth outlook (now expects second-quarter revenue to be up 11% to 13% from the same period in pre-pandemic 2019, compared with previous guidance of up 6% to 8%) but trimmed its capacity guidance (now expects available seat miles to be down 7% to 8% from 2019 levels versus previous expectations of a decline of 6% to 8%) and raised its fuel-cost estimate (average fuel price per gallon estimate was raised to US$3.92 to US$3.97 from US$3.59 to US$3.64, and the outlook for cost per available seat mile (CASM) excluding fuel was raised to 10% to 11% above 2019 levels from 8% to 10%). The Nasdaq -2.47%. Apple Inc fell -3.86% following a cautious research note from Morgan Stanley that cited slowing app store growth. The company’s Worldwide Developers Conference kicks off tonight AEST, with high expectations for its next generation operating system, a new Apple Watch and possibly a glimpse at the headset for virtual and artificial reality. Google-parent Alphabet Inc and Meta Platforms Inc declined roughly -2.6% and -4.1% respectively. Amazon.com Inc fell -2.52% to US$2,447 ahead of the 20-for-1 stock split becoming effective tonight AEST, meaning the stock should trade around US$122. Amazon’s share count will jump to 10.2B from 509M. It marks the fourth time Amazon has declared a stock split since it went public in 1997, but the first in more than two decades. Alphabet Inc’s own 20-for-1 stock split takes effect in mid-July. The small capitalisation Russell 2000 lost -0.77%. In merger and acquisition (M&A) news, Turning Point Therapeutics Inc soared +118.35% after the clinical-stage oncology company agreed to be acquired by biopharmaceutical company Bristol-Myers Squibb Co (+0.13%) in an all-cash deal valuing Turning Point at ~US$3.77B.